Tender Is the Night

Tender Is the Night

by

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Themes and Colors
Excess, Destruction, and the Failed American Dream Theme Icon
Gender, Mental Illness, and Psychiatry Theme Icon
The Pursuit of Youth and Innocence Theme Icon
Racism and Otherness Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Tender Is the Night, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.

Excess, Destruction, and the Failed American Dream

Set in the 1920s, Tender is the Night depicts a group of wealthy American expatriates traveling around Europe during the Roaring Twenties. This period—between the end of World War I and the Wall Street crash of 1929—was a time of great prosperity in America and Western Europe. Fitzgerald himself coined the term “the Jazz Age” to describe the glamor and decadence of the era. In Tender is the Night, Dick Diver, the ambitious…

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Gender, Mental Illness, and Psychiatry

In Tender is the Night, Fitzgerald captures the cultural anxieties of the 1920s through the lens of the modern psychiatric clinic. Here, the doctors in the story treat alcoholism, homosexuality (at the time widely considered something that could and should be treated with conversion therapy), and various nervous disorders. Written at a time when society was still grappling with the aftermath and trauma of World War I, Fitzgerald chooses to explore these cultural anxieties…

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The Pursuit of Youth and Innocence

The prosperity of the Jazz Age brought new possibilities for young Americans, who often traveled to Europe to escape the United States’ puritanical moral codes and the prohibition. While the younger generations drank and smoked more, wore more revealing clothes, and expressed more sexually liberated behaviors, a moral panic increased among older generations, who feared for the loss of innocence in society. Capturing this tension, Fitzgerald’s characters in Tender is the Night are obsessed with…

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Racism and Otherness

Despite some progress in terms of mainstream attitudes to race and racial difference, the interwar period was nevertheless haunted by unequivocally racist attitudes—as evident in the works of writers like Fitzgerald and his white contemporaries. Trivial or insignificant ethnic minority characters form the backdrop to the European experience that the white expatriate community enjoys in Tender is the Night. As Dick and Nicole Diver and their set move effortlessly between various cities—partying frivolously thanks…

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